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    • Tumbleweeds, despised icons of the West | Colorado Arts and ...

      Not native to the West

      • Although tumbleweeds were familiar icons of the West, they were not native to the West, nor were they growing around the early western towns when they were established (Boulder, 1858; Abilene, Kansas, 1860; Laramie, Wyo., mid-1860s; Cheyenne, Wyo., 1867; Dodge City, 1872), for tumbleweeds were accidentally introduced from Russia to South Dakota in a contaminated shipment of flaxseed in 1873.
      www.colorado.edu › asmagazine › 2018/02/09
  1. Feb 7, 2022 · Like cowboys, wagon trains and buffalo, tumbleweeds are icons of the Old West. These twisted balls of dead foliage rolling across deserts and the open range are staples of Western movies and...

    • Sidney Stevens
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  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › TumbleweedTumbleweed - Wikipedia

    Some species of the Apiaceae form tumbleweeds from their flower umbels, much as some Amaryllidaceae do. In the Asteraceae, the knapweed Centaurea diffusa forms tumbleweeds. It is native to Eurasia and is naturalized in much of North America.

  4. Feb 9, 2018 · Tumbleweeds are a group, not a single species. The most familiar and probably the most common in the West is Russian thistle, Salsola tragus, the first introduced. But currently seven species of Salsola are in North America, none are native and all are referred to as tumbleweeds.

  5. Despite their iconic status, tumbleweeds are not native to America. Instead, as Smart News wrote previously, they were brought over from Asia in the late 1800s. After decades of...

  6. How did tumbleweeds spread across North America? Russian thistle isn't native to North America. It is instead native to dry and semi-dry regions throughout Europe and central Asia. The Russian thistle made its first known appearance in North America in the 1870s, in Bonhomme County, South Dakota.

  7. Mar 8, 2024 · Tumbleweeds originated in Russia and Siberia and they were brought to the United States in the 1870s, hidden among imported flax seeds, according to University of California, Riverside. It only took 20 years for the plants to spread throughout the western United States and parts of Canada.

  8. Aug 15, 2014 · But the tumbleweed, like many of the people who live out West, are not descendants of true U.S. natives. They arrived as invaders from Russia around 1870 and have been impossible to get...

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